The Contracts for Difference (CfD) scheme is the government’s mechanism for supporting new British low-carbon electricity generation projects, such as offshore wind and solar developers, and along with FIDER, an early form of the scheme, has awarded contracts to new low carbon projects in Britain with a total capacity of 26.1GW.
The competitive nature of the scheme has already proven successful at placing downward pressure on prices since the first auction was held, with the per unit (MWh) price of offshore wind dropping by almost 70 per cent between the first auction in 2015 and the latest in 2022, the UK’s department for energy security and net zero said in a press release.
UK is considering reforms to the CfD scheme, which supports new low-carbon electricity generation projects in the country, to include non-price factors such as supply chain sustainability, addressing skills gaps, innovation, and grid flexibility and operability when awarding contracts.
The aim is to drive further investment in the renewable energy sector.
Currently, CfD are awarded based on the bid price submitted by renewable energy generating stations, such as an offshore wind farm—the aim being to increase deployment and ensure good value to electricity consumers and, over time, drive down costs.
The government is now seeking evidence and views about reviewing applications?not just on their ability to deliver low-cost renewable energy deployment, but also based on how much a renewable energy project contributes to the wider health of the renewable energy industry.
These reforms could see applicants considering overall costs alongside other ‘non price factors’ such as supply chain sustainability, addressing skills gaps, innovation, and enabling system and grid flexibility and operability when submitting their bids, which could help drive investment in the sector, grow the economy, and boost the country’s energy security.
More investment in supply chain sustainability, for example, would help to reduce its carbon impact and access the resources and materials it needs to deploy sustainability at scale in the longer term. Investment to address the skills gaps would help to train the technicians needed to deploy ever larger renewable energy generation stages.
The UK’s minister of state for energy security and net zero Graham Stuart said: “Our flagship CfD scheme has been hugely successful in supporting British low-carbon electricity generation, while also driving down costs for the benefit of consumers. But we want to go further to ensure we maximise the scheme’s potential to improve energy security and ensure renewable energy developers can make the necessary investment in supply chains and innovation, which will ultimately make for a stronger sector and help our economy to grow.
“This potential reform to the scheme to introduce non-price factors presents a solution to grow the renewable energy supply chain as we accelerate our energy transition plans to power more of Britain from Britain.”
This Call for Evidence is part of the UK government’s work to continue to evolve the CfD scheme as it considers long-term market arrangements through the Review of Electricity Market Arrangements (REMA).
Building a more secure energy future with thriving green industries will also have the knock-on effect of helping to grow the nation’s economy and create good jobs across the country, with billions of pounds in private investment and 68,000 green jobs supported since late 2020, added the release.
The government is exploring introducing non-price factors into the CfD auction allocation process following recommendations made in Chris Skidmore’s Net Zero Review and the report earlier this month from the Offshore Wind Champion Tim Pick.
If, following this Call for Evidence, appropriate changes to the CfD scheme have been identified and deemed more effective than other potential policy levers, the government will launch a consultation on more detailed proposals.
CfDs have already helped accelerate plans to diversify, decarbonise, and domesticate the UK’s energy supplies, with the last round (AR4) securing almost 11GW of low carbon capacity—enough to generate sufficient electricity to power 12 million British homes.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (NB)